Keywords:
Earth sciences.
;
Geography.
;
Environmental geography.
;
Human geography.
;
Environmental management.
;
Environmental sciences
Description / Table of Contents:
Part 1. Biocultural Diversity and its Construction in Latin America.-Chapter 1. ntroduction: A Review of the State of the Art of Ethnobiology in Argentina and related Latin American Countries -- Chapter 2. Domestication of Species and Landscapes in Mesoamerica -- Chapter 3. Trees in the Conformation of Relational Landscapes in the North of Mendoza (Central Western Argentina) from the Pre-Hispanic Period to the Modern Day -- Chapter4. The Immateriality of Cultivated Plants in the Context of Rio Negro Region (Brazilian Amazon) -- Chapter 5. Food Sovereignty: Shared Knowledge and Experiences in Argentine Ethnobiology and Archaeology -- Chapter 6. Local Knowledge, Food, Territory and Biodiversity. Case Studies from Mexico and Brazil -- Chapter 7. Criollos from the “Chaco Húmedo Formoseño”. Some Aspects of their Ethnomedicine -- Part 2. Methodological Approaches to the Study of Biocultural Diversity -- Chapter 8. Methodological Diversity and Reflexivity in Ethnobiological Research -- Chapter 9. Confessional Narrative of Patriarchal Misconceptions in Ethnobiological Studies of Northern Patagonia -- Chapter 10. Urban Ethnobiology: a Space for Reflection on the Relationships Between People and their Environment in Multicultural Contexts -- Chapter 11. Studies about Environmental Change and Local Knowledge in Latin America -- Chapter 12. Conservation and Identification of Botanical Materials in Ethnobiological Studies -- Chapter 13. Socio-Anthropological Holism and the Origins of French Ethnobotany -- Chapter 14. “We are the Seeds”: Formal Teaching of Ethnobiology -- Chapter 15. Dialogues with the Community: Knowledge Exchange from Ethnobiology -- Part 3. The Ethnobotany as a Theoretical and Practical Turning Point between Cultural and Biological Conservation: Valorisation Tools Linking Tradition and Innovation -- Chapter 16. Contributions of Ethnobotanics to the Use and Conservation of Cactaceae Biocultural Heritage in Northwestern Córdoba. Identity Studies, Agro-diversity and Conservation of Traditional Practices -- Chapter 17. Following the footsteps of ethnobiologists in the Andresito Peninsula palmitales. Basic and applied science as indissoluble parts when local actors are involved -- Chapter 18. Development of Meliponiculture in Argentina, Ethnobiology and Melissopalynology as Tools for Progress -- Part 4. Ethnophycology and ethnomycology -- Chapter 19. Ethnophycology and Ethnomycology: Two Fields of Study with Great Potential -- Chapter 20. Women Seaweed Gatherers of Queilen (Chiloé, Chile) -- Chapter 21. Ethnomycology of South-East Mexico -- Part 5. Historical ethnobiology and the meaning of the living beings in the documental sources -- Chapter 22. Research on Historical Ethnobotany carried out by The Laboratory of Ethnobotany from The Argentine Museum of Natural History -- Chapter 23. Plant Complexes and the Importance of Context in Historical Ethnobotany Identifications -- Chapter 24. An Approach to Qom Ethnobotany of the Nineteenth Century based on the Work of Ángel Carranza -- Chapter 25. Historical Ethnobotanical Documentation by Means of Images -- Part 6. Pre- and Post-Contact Plant Management: a Temporal Vision about Cultural Elections Related to Plant Modes of Use in Past Conjunctural Contexts -- Chapter 26. Post-conquest Early Changes in Phyto-cultural Systems from the Analysis of Food: a Synthesis for the Argentine Arid Diagonal with Emphasis on the “Gobernación de Tucumán” –Governorate of Tucumán- -- Chapter 27. Advances in Archaeobotany of Central-Eastern Argentina. Dynamics in the Use of Plants from the Early Holocene to Colonial Times Through the Analysis of Micro and Macro Plant Remains -- Chapter 28. The Trees in the Construction of Landscapes in the Argentine Pampean Region. Changes, Continuities and Resignifications in the “Primera Estancia” of Magdalena (Buenos Aires) -- Chapter 29. Plant Consumption in the Northern Patagonian Archipelago (41-47° S, Chile) since 6000 Years BP to Historical Times: an Integrative Vision through Ceramic Use Residues and Human Dental Calculus -- Part 7. The Archaeofauna and its Narratives -- Chapter 30. Herders and Llamas, Companion Species in the Southern Andes during the Last Three Millenia -- Chapter 31. Taphonomy and Archaeofaunas: Friends with Benefits? -- Chapter 32. Multiple Aproaches for Archaeozoological Studies in Argentina -- Chapter 33. Variations in the Isotopic Niche of South American Camelids. A Vision from Applied Zooarchaeology.
Type of Medium:
Online Resource
Pages:
1 Online-Ressource(XXII, 570 p. 5 illus.)
Edition:
1st ed. 2024.
ISBN:
9783031605529
Series Statement:
The Latin American Studies Book Series
URL:
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-60552-9
DOI:
10.1007/978-3-031-60552-9
Language:
English
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